March 30
April 1 is the start of the Tour of Honor (ToH), a motorcycle event in which the participants visit and photograph a designated set of memorials. Although in past years Jeff has sought only
to be a finisher in this grand tour, this year he decided to try for one of
trophies. Trophies are awarded to the
first three finishers of all seven memorials in any single state. Jeff set his sights on trying to visit all seven of the Virginia memorials on the first day of the tour.
Given Virginia’s geography, his strategy was to position us
in south/southwestern Virginia the night before so that we’d be moving north and toward home as
we completed the ToH bonuses. Although there is no deadline for completing the full state tour (other than the end of the tour, October 31), finishing as quickly as possible, for example, on the first day possible, certainly increases your chances of being the first, second, or third to do so. Since April 1
was Easter Sunday and we both had to be to work on Monday, the counterclockwise path that Jeff anticipated seemed like an
economical use of time. He suggested
Abingdon as our Sunday starting point both because it was a cute town and
because it was the location of Zazzy’z coffee house.
The interest in Zazzy’z dates to the spring of 2017, the Big
Money Rally (BMR, which despite it’s name is a tour, not a rally), and my
competitive nature. Being new to Grand
Tours and motorcycling generally, as of early 2017 I had not paid much
attention to how these tours were operated.
Until, that is, the day when Jeff casually mentioned over lunch, after a
morning of bonus hunting, that we had achieved “bronze” status in the BMR. Until that moment, I had no idea that Grand
Tours could be competitive. But once I
knew, I was on it!
The 2017 BMR included points for finding words that ended in
Z and started with each of the letters of the alphabet. So, I supplemented Jeff’s work with the goal
of completing the alphabet. Artz, Benz,
Cutz, Dogz, etc. proved pretty easy given America’s love for “cute”
misspellings and incorporation of other languages. But I, X and Z were real challenges. After extensive hunting, I found Zazzy’z in
Abington. Jeff didn’t actually use it in
the 2017 BMR, opting instead for Zumiez, but when passing by it in early 2017
he did take a picture of it for me and therefore it became a destination spot
for us. (By the way, we did find a word
for every letter and got points for every letter except for X. We found “Salon XYZ” and “X-Rayz” but both
were disallowed, the first for not being a word – seriously, why is XYZ not a
word when Artz or Dogz are? – and the second due to its hyphen).
I digress. Back to
March 30, 2018.
Early on the morning of March 30 we started our journey
toward Abington. We used this ride as on
opportunity to add to our bonus finds for BMR 2018 and the Team Strange
“Melting Pot” tour, both of which were already active. With such lousy weather this spring, we still
had lots of potential bonuses in Virginia we had not yet reached.
We meandered through Lake Ridge (BMR’s word of the day “Bee”
at the “Bee Store”), Fredericksburg (for “Bowman’s Consulting,” another BMR) and
then headed west along Route 3 (Plank Rd) through Chancellorsville and other
historic Civil War sites. As we neared
Constitution Hwy, Jeff decided to pull off to adjust the tire pressure on the
bike. He noted we were near an unusual
virtual geocache (one he had already found) and so thinking I’d enjoy finding
it, turned onto Constitution Hwy and down a small side road next to a small
cemetery. The cache was the grave site
of Stonewall Jackson’s left arm, which according to the notes was buried in the
Lacey family burial plot.
I set off to find this cache, not realizing (1) the cache
was in a National Park site and (2) Jeff pulled off quite away short of
it. After hiking more than .3 miles across the
cemetery (which I at first thought would be the destination), a cornfield, and a
small grove of trees, around a drainage ditch and up a hill – in full
motorcycle gear – I saw over the hill a house, and a man in a reflective
vest. Thinking I was about to hike into
someone’s front yard, I prepared to turn back when I saw a parking lot and
realized that the Lacey plot was probably not an obscure spot on the edge of a
cornfield but part of a public site. So,
I continued on. As I neared the
building, the man in the vest AND a park ranger approached me, both asking: “Where did you come from?” I suppose I was quite a sight – in heavy
black garb topped with a silver helmet and dangling with wires (from the heated
gear). Assuring me I was welcomed, the
man pointed me toward the cemetery where I indeed found the grave site.
Realizing that Jeff by now probably thought I was lost (we
were well outside the range of the radio), I tried calling and texting him to
pick me up rather than taking the return trek across the cornfield. However, the novelty of my arrival had apparently
endeared me to the guy in the vest. He intercepted me on my way to meet Jeff to invite me to tour the house (“It’s
open today!”) and, once I explained my ride was coming, urged me to get Jeff to
stop as well.
As I was waiting for Jeff, the vest guy and I had a lovely
chat about the trees (the 4th largest black walnut in America, a stately
sycamore, a sugar maple largely out of my line of sight, but which they
reportedly tap in the spring, and a pecan tree that does not bear nuts because
you need a male and female tree and they have only one). He also volunteered that the lemons that I
had likely seen at the grave (which I had) were left as tributes because they
apparently were a favorite fruit of Jackson’s. The vest guy also confided that
his supervisor sometimes rides her motorcycle out to the site and so when he
first saw me, he thought it might be her turning up unexpectedly (and from a
very odd direction). Having long since
realized I was at a National Park location, I took a wild shot and said “Oh,
would that be Kirsten?” (another member of the long-distance riding community who I had met at the Iron Butt Rally finishers' banquet last spring). He was a bit
surprised I knew her, but not terribly. Just then, Jeff, with the really incredibly noticeable headlights, appeared from
among the trees and gingerly rolled down the gravely drive to get me. My new friend was crestfallen that Jeff
wasn’t interested in touring the house but happily urged us to come back
again. And so we moved on.
The remainder of the ride that day was notable primarily for
being stunningly beautiful. We traversed
tiny back roads, up and down hills, around hairpin turns and across rolling
hills in the bright spring sunshine. We
rolled through a number of tiny towns including Oriskany, VA, with its adorable
post office, and saw a slew of people sky jumping at a regional airport.
We made a stop at Roaring Run Furnace, which was well worth it. Jeff had previously visited the spot in the middle of the night to get a photo of the iron gate, flanked by stone pillars. But it is also a virtual geocache and on this return visit we had abundant sunlight and enjoyed the short walk up to the old furnace, across the burbling run.
Another geocache – successful – led us to a bluff off the
Appalachian Trail with a spectacular view.
We collected a number of other bonuses over the course of
the day and pulled into Abingdon shortly after dark. We scoped out the potential spots for dinner
(we hadn’t eaten all day except for breakfast at home and some snack bars),
stopped to pick up “creeper” (in the dark) and then had a decent dinner at a
Mexican place in a strip mall and spent the night at a Super 8.
April 1
We started the day at the Super 8 in Abingdon VA, waking
shortly before 5 a.m., a bit later than anticipated. While I showered, Jeff downloaded the Tour of
Honor (ToH) bonus list that had been released during the night and began
planning the day’s trip – hoping to be the first, or at least second or third, to get all 7 of the memorials in Virginia.
When I emerged from the shower he said, somewhat hesitantly, that he had
a route that we could do, but it might be longer than I would like. How long?
1025 miles in 18 hours. He
assured me that if part way through I wanted to cut it short and head home,
that would be okay. Looking at the
route, it was apparent that even quitting half way through wouldn’t shorten the
ride by much. The route had us scouring
southern and central Virginia, then crossing the bay-bridge tunnel and heading
north on the peninsula, passing by DC and catching the last bonus in the
northern reaches of Virginia. Even if we
stopped when we neared Washington, short of the last bonus, that would be a very
full day. Further, it was Sunday so the
next day was work for both of us and at 18 hours of predicted time, even
hustling, we wouldn’t get home until early morning. Even Jeff didn’t sound very enthusiastic
about this; whether doubtful about taking me on this trek or just generally, I
couldn’t tell. I promised to look at the
route more closely while he showered.
A couple of things about the map stood out. First, there were a few bonuses that were as
close to us as the ones Jeff had picked out, except they were in West
Virginia. Second, West Virginia is much
smaller than Virginia. So, when he came
out of the shower I asked if we could do West Virginia instead. After running some quick calculations, he
said – yeah! – about 700 miles and 14 hours.
That seemed much more doable to me.
So, we were off!
With the additional trip planning we didn’t hit the road
until just before 7 a.m. Having planned
on Virginia, not West Virginia, we weren’t ideally situated, but it wasn’t terrible. We blew off the first previously planned stop
(not a ToH site) and got our first of the seven West Virginia ToH memorials –a Vietnam
Veterans’ memorial– at a West Virginia welcome center. Our second ToH stop took us up Route 19,
across the stunning New River Gorge, to Summersville. We parked in the lot for the city jail
(ignoring the signs that said police parking only) and we got a picture with
the flag and bike of the large monument in the center of the yard, dedicated to
the two daughters of Henry Morris, who were killed in 1792, “Last Victims of
Indian Treachery in WV,” and then read the plaque commemorating Nancy Hart,
Confederate spy. I took pictures of the
Morris memorial and the Hart information, while Jeff wandered about a bit
snapping pictures of the other memorials scattered about the yard, including
one to a deputy. I glanced at that one
too, while eying Fran’s coffeehouse across the street and deciding whether I
wanted to force a cappuccino stop. (I
was dead tired the night before and the hum of the highway riding had been
putting me to sleep, despite the early morning hours. Napping in the pillion seat never seems like
a great idea, so I thought some caffeine might be a good idea).
Deciding to forego Fran’s, we hopped back on the bike and
headed south on Route 19, crossing the New River Gorge a second time, and then
turned off on a route that promised to route us to Gauley’s Bridge, and
possibly past another coffee shop. The
route to Gauley’s Bridge was a bust.
After following a pick-up truck down a well-paved but narrow lane, we
found our turn-off. It was a mud patch
leading to a rutted and crumbling road that – despite the GPS’ insistence that
it had a state route number – looked like the poorly maintained driveway to a
long-abandoned farm. After yesterday’s
experience, we decided that would be “The Road Not Taken” and retraced our
steps to the highway. We made another
pass at looking for a coffee shop, ending up on narrow dead-end drive in
Fayetteville (that at least was paved!), settled for a Starbucks “shot” from
the Little General Store at the Exxon gas station, and backtracked on Route 19
to pick up Route 60.
Route 60 was an absolutely stunning ride, even on this grey overcast
day. It winds along the bluff over the
New River offering some breathtaking views of the deep gorge which would have
been even better if we were going southwest (that is, in the other direction). The New River meets up with the Gauley River
at Gauley Bridge, after which Route 60 tracks along the banks of the Kanawha
River which is formed by the intersection of the other two rivers. Jeff reminisced about his first cross-country
drive as a newly commissioned naval officer heading to his first post at
Newport News. He recalled how amazed he
was by the Route 60 landscape and eastern landscape generally, so unlike the
Western landscape in which he had lived until then.
A stop in Charleston got us a Liberty Bell replica for the Melting
Pot tour and we continued on to our third ToH monument, in Barboursville. This one was located in an expansive – really
expansive – city park that included all sorts of recreational sites, a school,
a lake, and our monument.
Our fourth stop was in Point Pleasant on the banks of the
Ohio. Before reaching that monument, in
a park on the Ohio River, we stopped for photos of the Mothman, an IBR site
that was part of the 2018 BMR bonus list and long on the list of places that
Jeff had promised to show me. I can only
think that every town that sees its fortunes fading should get a Mothman,
complete with myth, sculpture, a haunted hotel, and the world’s ONLY Mothmanmuseum (which I’ll bet is completely true!) It was awesome!
Stop number 5, in Williamstown, was dedicated to fallen highway workers and number 6 in Fairmont was another Vietnam Vets memorial with an impressive helicopter landing display right behind it. We picked up a Doddridge County sign and an IBR giraffe for the BMR before sprinting for Seneca Rocks.
Part way through the day, Jeff had observed that Seneca
Rocks, our last stop, was a daylight only bonus. The directions warned that if we arrived too
late, the gate might be closed. After
the giraffe, which we got sometime between 6 and 6:30 p.m., the GPS was
predicting we’d arrive at our last memorial shortly before 8 p.m. which would
be almost 20 minutes after sundown. That
meant we really needed to haul ass to get there, and preferably arrive faster
than predicted.
The route was over twisty mountain roads and the low cloud
cover in several cases engulfed us. The
day had been overcast and chilly anyway, but as we headed over the mountains,
the temperature dropped to about 39 degrees.
I was happy that in addition to my heated jacket I had added a turtleneck
over my long-sleeve shirt back at the fallen highway worker memorial, but I was
wishing for my heated pants.
When we arrived at the Seneca Rocks National Park at about
7:44 p.m., the building was completely dark.
We continued down the road to the entrance driveway and to our surprise,
the gate was wide open. The park was
completely deserted so we drove right to the front entrance. As planned, we quickly took a picture of the
bike and flag to establish daylight as early as possible and then hoofed it
around back and a short way down the path to get the memorial. Fortunately, there was a gap in the hills
just behind the memorial that shone brightly in the pictures, affirming that
night was not yet upon us.
Whew! We did it! We completed all seven stops and now had only
the nearly 3-hour ride home left to accomplish for the day. After stopping at the Sheetz in Moorefield
for our first meal of the day (unless you count the PopTarts we ate in the
hotel room and the snack bars we stuffed in our mouths at memorial stops), and a change into heated pants, we
continued toward home. Our journey was
favored with a stunning, nearly full moon that played hide-and-seek with the
scuttling clouds – truly a lovely sight lighting our way home. That, and our hope that we were among the
first to complete the 7 memorials of West Virginia, dispelled some of our
exhaustion with elation.
My change over to full heated gear provide the opportunity
for Jeff to observe that the GSA was able to support the bright lights, our two
heated jackets, and the heated grips without a problem, but when I pushed my
pants up to full power the alternator started to complain. But at about quarter-power on the pants, the
bike seemed to be okay and I was too, particularly since the temperature as we
headed toward Interstate 66 was much higher than in the mountains.
After arriving back at Jeff’s, I unpacked and put away my
stuff and then got in my car for the drive back to DC. As I neared home, the phone rang. I was surprised to hear Jeff, who I had
assumed was preparing to crash when I left him 20 minutes earlier. “We photographed the wrong memorial!” he said
with anguish in his voice. It was the
fallen deputy, not the Morris daughters, who should have been in our picture back at stop
two. In the drizzling rain, he had
mistaken the picture match as viewed on his cell phone.
As it turns out, the three West Virginia trophies went to a
team of three who rode together. Whether
we were faster than them or not, I don’t know, but if we weren’t we wouldn’t
have gotten a trophy anyway. It was a
bitter ending to an otherwise great weekend.
But then again, there’s next year!