Greetings from Tom in Icelandic State Park, North Dakota (written July 19th)

Today marks 31 days – one month – of moving across this country west to east. I’m sitting in a picnic shelter staying dry as it rains and thunders all around me. The shelter is located in Icelandic State Park, in the northeast corner of North Dakota. (The park was named after the first settlers – Icelandic families.) It was the threat of heavy rain that prompted me to stop here after only two hours of cycling. In those two hours I was able to cycle just over 30 miles. Compare that to yesterday, when pedaling 5 ½ hours moved me 42 ½ miles. There was a point after I’d already paid to stay here and before the rain started when I had second thoughts about stopping so soon. At that point the winds had picked up blowing from the west, this time at 18 mph. A tail wind like that could have moved me across the North Dakota – Minnesota border perhaps more than 70 miles. Nevertheless. I am happy to have stopped here where I have spent the day in a local museum, doing some reading, napping, and writing this blog post.

Unlike much of the rest of the country (and much of Europe) North Dakota is not in the grip of triple digit temperatures. In fact, I’m sitting here in a wool cap, four layers, and my sleeping bag across my lap. This rain is forecast to continue well into the evening. Even though I’ve paid for a tent site, I’ve yet to set up my tent and am considering trying to stay here in this shelter where I can stay dry. Tomorrow is forecast to be sunny again, and with any luck I will still have a bit of west wind.

It has occurred to me that it might be helpful for some of you if I were to describe the road I’m on and the landscape I’m riding through. For the last three days, I’ve been riding on North Dakota Route 5 – a two-lane road paralleling the Canadian border – at times within a dozen miles of that border. This road is, for the most part, flat, straight, and not heavily trafficked. There is no shoulder to speak of, so I cycle in the east bound lane. Traffic coming behind me (including semis) treats me as slow moving traffic, crossing into the westbound lane to pass me. I can see approaching traffic miles ahead of me and, in my side mirror, traffic coming up behind me. It is only seldom when vehicles traveling in opposite directions have to slow because of me. Most drivers are accommodating. 

Route 5 is dotted with small towns 30 to 40 miles apart. These are centers of commerce. Between these towns is farmland – hundreds of acres of it. (I learned in the museum today that the average North Dakota farm is over 1,200 acres.) The only buildings are grain silos. There are some copses of trees, but they are few and far between. This morning, riding under threatening skies, I kept looking for where I might shelter if the rain were to come sooner than predicted. I saw very few opportunities. 

Greetings from Tom at Whitefish Lake Campground, Whitefish Montana (written July 9th)

Arrived here yesterday afternoon after a 40 mile ride the last 4 of which were harrowing (no shoulder, 70mph traffic, including lumber trucks, cement trucks, RVs and cars). Nearly 2.5 miles of this last four I walked the bike – NOT SAFE. Found a bike shop here that could repair my crank – one of the gears had broken teeth. SO another night here, then further progress towards Glacier National Park. 

Once in West Glacier I will have to make some hard decisions. There are only two ways over the Rockies. The preference is to take the Going-to-the-Sun-Road. This road has limited tourist traffic, but no trucks or RVs. Unfortunately this road received four feet of snow at the end of June and so at the time of this writing is still not open all the way through to East Glacier. The Alternate route is more of the same of what I rode/walked through yesterday, so it is no alternate. If the “sun road” isn’t open all the way through, I will ride what I can of it, then ride back to an overnight camp site (where I can leave my gear) and hopefully catch a train to get me on the other side of the divide (maybe even into North Dakota).

I’m only just recovering from a bout of bronchitis, which has slowed me down a bit over the last few days – nice to have two overnights here to recoup. Somewhere between here and Eureka I lost my credit card. I’ve put a hold on it and no charges had been made that weren’t charges I made. And I still have a debit card. All-in-all, I am grateful to be able to continue, to meet the people along the way, to see the beauty of a part of the country I have never been in.

I continue to be astonished at the “material wealth” that many people have. RVs the size of my house hauling boats or a second car behind. The RVs are equipped with all the modern conveniences (wide screen TVs, generators for electricity when there are no hookups, “toys” galore). A very blatant example of the wealth disparity and consumptive nature of our economy. There doesn’t seem to be any thought that “nature” is being enjoyed at “nature’s” expense. Seeing it all makes me feel a bit less optimistic of humanity’s future. 

But even though I’m traveling now, I still live in Hope.

~Tom