Wednesday, August 21, 2019

The Obligatory Ride

Photo Credit: 129Photos.com
Tuesday, August 13th began before daybreak. Having learnt my lesson from last year, the RT rode task-specific trailer up from Florida the day before — although I’m not sure if its ride was a pleasant one. (Hey #Uhaul, bounce much?)

I grabbed a quick shower and light breakfast as Mr. Copperface crested Big Oak’s eastern tree line. Time! Prep for the shaken-n-stirred motor (that’s what my retired policeman father calls it) would soon follow. Fueled and preflighted—tires, brakes, clutch and lighting checks, plus setting my phones mapping for the pre-programmed “DRAGON RUN” route — meant she was ready to roll. I climbed on, bid my farewells to the folks, and quietly chicaned my way out of their subdivision. The air was damp but cool, even for August. In any case, at least for me, it was electrified.

Bifurcating Murrayville from Bark Camp to Old Dahlonega at that time of the morning is always a treat. People are barely awake, allowing their automatic headlights (and consciousness!) to remain off in the morning mist. School buses and chicken trucks aplenty. Good Morning and Good Riddance. Within moments my route jumped onto a sleepy Claude Parks Road, which, after a nice, curvy/hilly warmup would take me to GA52 and an area known as Garland.

No highways for me just yet. Within a mile, I crossed a newly-minted roundabout—which reportedly confounds commuters for several months in these parts — and dashed northward via Copper Mines Road. I’ve taken this route through Georgia’s relatively new wine country several times over the past couple years and innumerable times in my youth. It’s rapidly becoming a favorite. Love the vineyard vibe, and even though I don’t consider myself a wine snob, I’ve quaffed multiple tomes on the subject. Fiddled with some home-fermentation many moons ago, too. Chateauneuf de pape, anyone? Anyway, It’s awesome to see this industry take off near my old stomping grounds, and I’m onboard with nearly everything it represents. Excellent use of the land, great times for visitors and tourism, joyous memories for event goers, and spectacular venues for music and photography or other arts! Yeah, I dig it.

Copper Mines soon terminated at Cavender Creek—which Google’s voice assistant pronounced as Kah-VAN-der for some reason. I promptly switched the American Google girl out for a nice Aussie lass without street name pronunciations. Much better in the helmet. KahVANder Creek brought me to Town Creek Church Road, then Frogtown Road, and finally Damascus Church Road—all quiet and bucolic byways traversing farmlands and wineries. The roads before THE roads are just as nice, you see. To the folks that experience this on a daily basis? Lucky.  This is pretty much the same route taken last year towards Cherohala. I was anticipating US129 through Neel’s Gap again, and it did not disappoint.

Photo Credit: Google (Apparently in winter. You can't see around it fully in the summer!)
Since taking this route twice to and fro Cherohala, I came to appreciate its twisties. The three-lane width made for greater sight-distance and speed. Best of all, one’s ability to pass slower vehicles without much ado. The crisscrossing of undulations lane-to-lane (in same direction) when no traffic is around can’t possibly be overrated. So much gravity at work and play. What a bonus… and I get to do this TWICE today?

At Neel’s Gap — near Blood Mountain and intersecting the Appalachian Trail — US129 heels to the northern shade with a cooler, crisper feel. The bends soon settled down into dale farmland leading into Blairsville, Georgia. Sublime highway cruising until civilization reared its ugly head by way of road resurfacing, and this meant lane closures and waiting in a long traffic queue until a pilot truck lead us through the work zone. The cool and crisp suddenly gave way to helter swelter. Thank God I arrived only a couple minutes before the flagman flipped his sign from “STOP” to “SLOW”. But that thanks became curses (Murphy’s Law, of course!) when the pilot truck decided something less than parade speed was appropriate. Bloody gravity… This meant my feet dangled for constant corrections to save the clutch. I know little of other bikes; this beemer is my first. First gear is tall — meant to rocket take-offs from 0-40 — and it does not idle well at such a slow speed. I’d lean into the rear brake too if it weren’t for the prehistoric ABS (anti-lock braking system) that’s “grabby” at best to describe. These are all little nitpicks with my beloved. I have a few. She’s not perfect, but which bike is?

North, Miss Teschmacher, NORTH!

Cruising up US19/129 several miles past Nottely Dam and my paternal grandmother’s birthplace of Ivy Log, I unceremoniously crossed the state line into North Carolina. Gentle highway curves and hills for a few miles eventually brought me to the intersection with US74, several clicks southwest of Murphy. It’s a ramshackle flea market zone, as though unconsidered additions haved been steadily amassing since the middle of the last century. Smoke lingered from craftsmen kilns and oil fryers, and I caught glimpses of gravel alleyways dotted with cigarette butts and bits of foam cups. The market had its newer, cleaner parts too, in fairness. Clearly the area catered to tourism. Mountain schtuff! As enticing as it all might be, it was early and I had another mission. The first bit of it involved stopping by the Old First Baptist Cemetery in Murphy. 

Photo Credit: TNT - Old First Baptist Cemetery, Murphy, NC
I’ve been on a genealogy quest for several years now. Our particular Taylor line has a nice little mystery involving President Zachary Taylor’s grandfather (Zachary, Sr 1707-1768) and his enigmatic second wife, Esther Blackburn Jones, from whom our path ends without some additional proof. Rumors of document obfuscation, or blatant destruction have circulated online — conspiracy theories involving the cleansing of familial taint so a certain presidential candidate possessed the preferred vetting characteristics. Appearances and heredity were just as important then as they are now. A second wife with as many as 10 additional children, and perhaps a couple more adopted? All claiming heritage to the country’s brand new seat of power? Indeed, the Taylor estate in Orange, Virginia was (and still is) vast, and ole Zach probably didn’t want a dozen kids fighting over it. His property and other court records aren’t easy to research, either. The fine folks in Orange have apparently circled their wagons around the county court house, too. Maybe redacted; maybe MIA, who knows but maybe several unknown descendants who possibly barked up the same tree as myself. Have to place a “To Be Continued…” here, but the cemetery did reveal some bone-fruit in that I confirmed the location of a GGGG uncle who married into the Cherokee tribe. This factoid ultimately killed the remaining rumors of native blood in our own Taylor line. Oh well. Kind wondered why I didn’t innately run out to the woods naked and track bear sign. Now I know! (Still wonder about my father ;) Wait a minute... come to think, I do enjoy a good casino. Hmm...

The next batch of miles heading northwest up US19/74/129 is an open four-lane highway flooding traffic its way through the Cherokee River Valley, which is a sedate and rolling mixture of corn or tobacco fields with light industrial warehouses, backdropped by those lovely Blue Ridge mountains of the Nantahala National Forest.

Photo Credit: Google
Hate to insert another Google Earth shot, but I haven’t yet graduated to a 360° helmet cam. (Keen on the Rylo...Christmas hint!) This is pretty much what my view looked like. Maybe less road snakes, more clouds, and a tad more greenery. Frequent rain had been reported just before my run. 

It was still morning, barely, and the breeze still fresh. Up ahead in Topton, the clouds appeared heavy and clinging around 2,700ft elev. That’s not in the Mostly Sunny forecast, I thought. Riding in the rain no longer bothers me, though. In fact, I would have welcomed a brief shower. The RT handles weather with amazing ease — something I learned after being trapped by a massive thunderhead a month or so earlier. 18-mile solid downpour, and lightning exploding less than a mile away just on either side other road. It was right out of Lt. Dan’s hurricane scene. Idiot me climbed the mast and cursed God that day. Take me if it's my time, but I'm riding through here! Yet, with the road completely flooded and winds pouring sheets of water from the side, the bike never once quivered, not even a little. Damn, this is a FINE machine! (and kudos to Michelin for those Pilot Road GT 4s). So, yeah, some minor droplets in the hills would be no problem.

It never happened.

The next valley gave way to additional heat and stagnation. Robbinsville appeared on the GPS and it was close enough to lunchtime to justify a light meal. Hmmm… burger joints or the local question mark? Just before The Dragon? Probably shouldn't experiment, right? Well then… Wendy’s or McCardboard’s? You can guess where I ended up. 10:30. Perfect timing. Had the dining room to myself, save for Curious John working the front counter. My guess is he’s seen a few motorcyclists in his town, but since I was the only person in his dining room, he felt the need to strike up a conversation. Turns out he was central Florida escapee as well. Found his next life in the hills and won’t be going back, not even for the winter sun. Has it really gotten that bad? I wonder…
The small burger was just okay (whaddaya expect?) but it was enough to negate sloshing around by what was to come. Across the street was a preferred fuel vendor. Perfect. I topped off the tank and leaned on the throttle northward on US129. Next stop, that piece of Tail I’ve been dreaming about.

Now, I had to come back and add this bit at the last minute because I clean forgot about this trio of Harleys I had to follow all the way up to Deal's Gap from Robbinsville. Too many curves and traffic; no realistic passing opportunities. To make it worse, they apparently weren't accustomed to sharp switchbacks either. The group would compress around tight turns and on one sharp switchback, nearly came to a full stop right in front of me. Awkward. I finally had enough and pulled off Tapoco Road just beyond Cheoah Dam. I let the clock tick for a few minutes and resumed as a solo climber. Much better.

Photo Credit: Left Hand Productions
I made it!

Okay, decision time. Stop at the tourist meccas, or ride the beast first. Decisions, decisions…
Since the parking lots were already burgeoning with riders — mostly Harley folk from up north — I thought it best to peruse the souvenir shelves before I killed myself. I hadn’t really studied the Dragon; didn’t know any of the curves, either. I only recalled all those anxious anecdotes, the dread of psychotic, knee-dragging wack-jobs, hawg straddlers in over their depth, cars crossing lanes, and law law lawmen! Why would I even consider this place with oh so many alternative routes. I was warned (Thanks John Rider, you were still right about this place!)
Let’s face it, pretty much ANY stretch of pavement in Appalachia is going to be a fine ride. But no, we all have to do Deal’s Gap at least once. God, WHY is this road so popular?

I found out in short order, but back to the trap.

The T-shirts, I thought, would be faded and gone within a couple years, so I settled on a small patch for my jacket. It's the first participation trophy that will eventually adorn a sleeve. I tucked it in a pocket and fired up the RT in front of the babbling chromers, who were quite pleased since they didn’t have raise their voices over my exhaust. Nothing like a Southie accent echoing through southern slopes.

First riding impressions? 

“Hey, this is narrow!”
“Wow, the asphalt is not so good. Cracks and settlement depressions.”


Indeed, several spots were marked with spray paint as hazards. Most of those were towards the beginning — or the southern end, I should say. I soon realized that I hit the road at the perfect moment. Zero traffic… all clear ahead, and no rocketeers on my tail. The curves were relentless, demanding precision throttle and braking technique. So many apexes, I started to actually visualize tangent lines for all of them. Many I made, some I missed. None were totally blown. This was a math exam, after all.

Photo Credit: Killboy.com
Speed Limit 30

Are they kidding? I thought NOBODY was going 30mph out here, not even the Month-2 HD newbs. It was merely a theory. The truth is that all those twisty constrictions only felt fast; in actuality, my speedo hovered right around the 30 mark for most of the run. Now, I won’t incriminate myself by implying any lawlessness. Truth is, if you’re running The Dragon safely, you aren’t ogling the dash for even a split second. You’ll know if you’re riding at an outrageous pace by catching up to a ricer, flying off a curve, or autographing a piece of Blount County stationary.

As the uninterrupted Archimedean Screw-ish procession begat some semblance of a rhythm, my face shield filled with the first tent of the Grand Archivists. That would be one of those famous (infamous?) curve-side Dragon’s Tail photography tents, and I saw the first of several lens barrels raised in my direction. Great — I’ll have some cool pics for my blog! And then I started becoming far too conscious of the next photogs. Suck it in. Don’t miss that apex! You weren’t perfect, damn it! I was being distracted in vanity for those perfect shots, all well-heeled towards the pavement and sped up for increased bokeh. After a few of those YouTube Dragon crash videos replayed in my skull, reality provided the necessary slap to consciousness. Forget them and ride!

As Forest Gump puts it, “And just like that…” I had reached my targeted turnaround spot — the Deal’s Gap Overlook. Sure, I didn’t ride every last one of the 318 curves—Klaatu, Barada, Ni…— but I rode the best ones. The overlook is the most obvious spot to relax for a moment, take another piece of vanity, and ride the Tail back towards whence I came. Great more photo ops!
Don’t even think about it.

Photo Credit: TNT - Deal's Gap Overlook

Some HD riders took off ahead of me, so I waited several minutes. Nobody materialized on my side of the road… again. This must be rare. Yet another shot at this place, uninterrupted. No LEOs, no cars, no fluggety full-dressers, just me, the road and the pho… no, not them either. Just me and the road.

Now, I get it.
Some say it's not really a workout if you enjoy it. Gain, no pain. I never felt the bike’s 650 pounds; not even later. Two sets of 300 reps, plus all the reps to and fro. Nothing. It’s a test. It’s a supreme workout. It’s all it’s supposed to be under those circumstances: One hell of a curvy-ass mofo. I carved in my sleep for several days before writing this. I guess it has fully infected me now. I wasn’t in the slightest bit sure how this mid-life pursuit would go; thought it might fizzle after a couple good rides in the hills. Not even close.

Photo Credit: Killboy.com
It was time to head home. My tank had enough to make the beeline so I wasn’t worried about stopping again. 140 miles of southern Blue Ridge riding as the icing. I’d get to pound Neel’s Gap and enjoy yet more cool crisp mountain air. A serene vision.

Umm… no.

What I experienced instead was some sort of dog days convection effect. The valleys were absolutely scorching and stagnant. No amount of airflow into my modular Shoei Neotec could overcome the heat, and I found myself cracking it open with no traffic in proximity. The heat mandated that I’d open it completely at stops. This is worse than Florida! The Olympia air suit was also struggling with the flashes of heat and cool on the open road, too. Heading south just after noon, it would only get worse. That’s when I hit Blairsville and that same road resurfacing queue. Who is that moronic navigator of mine, anyway?!

I was so entirely focused on Neel’s Gap that I completely forgot about the construction. Stifling heat, wearing my clutch, asphalt and tar trucks. 20 minutes of hell before clearing the zone. I kept recalling my preplanning session where I contemplated a return through Hiawassee or Young Harris, then down to Suches via another renowned moto byway, GA180. No, I said. Neel’s is Da Bomb, and besides, you’ll be a wreck by that time anyway. Hindsight…

Indeed the return was torturous, and I had apparently overstayed my welcome at the gym. Traffic was heavier on this leg, and I was stuck at a 4th gear pace. Less speed = more heat. My lower back started complaining about those sudden dips, too. Hmm…age. Had I goofed to eschew the long way? Maybe. All I knew was that I was burning up, exhausted (but chipper!), and ready for an ice cold adult beverage.

Neel’s Gap. Finally! I blew past a trundling gravel hauler at the first passing opportunity, and from there it was literally all downhill. Downhill skiing at its finest, as I described last year—shooting over the moguls, and lasering apexes without interruption until Turner’s Corner and the southward leg descending (not ass-ending!) into Dahlonega AVA wine country. As the countryside insists, I dropped a gear and made an easy cruise of it, assessing the current grape crops as I passed. Fruit glistening of moisture in the summer sun, just a couple months away from harvest. I already wanted to return before I ever left. I knew I would — just didn’t know when.

The last 15 miles or so was honestly a blur. Familiar roads and biding time. Automatic pilot. Not exactly taken for granted, but I was focused on the end itself. The Tail is done.


Where to next? No idea.
Definitely will be a next, I know that!
GA 180? Blue Ridge Parkway? Ashville's Diamondback Devil’s Whip sounds dangerously delicious. I've been staring at the map lately. So many options. So many places out west I'd love to tour by bike as well. Time and funds though. For now, I'm content with Dixie.

Any Suggestions?
Photo Credit: 129Photos.com