• Hi everyone,

    As you all know, Coffee (Dean) passed away a couple of years ago. I am Dean's ex-wife's husband and happen to have spent my career in tech. Over the years, I occasionally helped Dean with various tech issues.

    When he passed, I worked with his kids to gather the necessary credentials to keep this site running. Since then (and for however long they worked with Coffee), Woodschick and Dirtdame have been maintaining the site and covering the costs. Without their hard work and financial support, CafeHusky would have been lost.

    Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working to migrate the site to a free cloud compute instance so that Woodschick and Dirtdame no longer have to fund it. At the same time, I’ve updated the site to a current version of XenForo (the discussion software it runs on). The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

    Unfortunately, the new software version doesn’t support importing the old site’s styles, so for now, you’ll see the XenForo default style. This may change over time.

    Coffee didn’t document the work he did on the site, so I’ve been digging through the old setup to understand how everything was running. There may still be things I’ve missed. One known issue is that email functionality is not yet working on the new site, but I hope to resolve this over time.

    Thanks for your patience and support!

A Plain Ride Report

WoodsChick

Administrator
Staff member
...the Carrizo Plain, that is. It's a national monument tucked in the hills between Bakersfield and San Luis Obispo, and it is a beautiful and peaceful place... http://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fo/bakersfield/Programs/carrizo.html

Eric and I had ridden the 2-strokes the last 3 weekends in a row and hadn't planned on riding this weekend. Besides, we had to be in Bakersfield Saturday night to see our nephew play minor-league hockey...

1b664860.jpg



While perusing the map, I happened to notice how close Bakersfield was to the Carrizo Plain. We both had Monday off for Martin Luther King Jr's birthday and the temps were supposed to be all warm and sunshiney so we loaded up the big bikes and all our bike-camping gear.

You can laugh all you want about California and it's politics, budget woes and penchant for voting bad actors into office, but you simply can't beat it in the winter...
P1030649.jpg


These rocks have Native American rock art in them...
P1030651.jpg


Mmm...my kinda pavement!
CarrizoPlainJan2010005.jpg


Hey, I bet that's fun down there!
P1030658.jpg


Yep, I was right...
P1030660.jpg


CarrizoPlainJan2010011.jpg


P1030669.jpg


CarrizoPlainJan2010012.jpg


CarrizoPlainJan2010013.jpg


There was all kinds of fun stuff to explore out there...
P1030671.jpg


CarrizoPlainJan2010009.jpg


We dropped out of the hills and headed down the Plain...
P1030686.jpg


A holiday weekend with gorgeous weather and not a soul to be seen...
P1030689.jpg


We cruised through the eastern hills only to be greeted by the horrific fog that was shrouding the entire central valley. I'm glad we weren't down there. Can you see the moon?
P1030693.jpg



More on the way...




WoodsChick
 
The Carrizo Plain is one of the last grasslands in California that is still in a somewhat natural state. The nice BLM lady told us that the whole Central Valley used to look just like it before the introduction of cattle and agribusiness. I can't imagine...
P1030696.jpg


P1030698.jpg


It was so incredibly quiet out here. No wind in the trees, no rustling in the bushes, no background hum of daily life...just the birds.

The roads were pretty fun, too...
P1030705.jpg


P1030706.jpg


It was time to cross the plain to get to our campspot. Ooh..."We don't want to go that way." we said. "It's too muddy!" we said. A quick scan with the binoculars confirmed it: two 4x4's and a BLM truck stuck in the mud out there...
P1030707.jpg


No, we were smart and went the other way, along the fenceline...til we came to this...
P1030711.jpg


We decided to go around. It was all fun and games til the wheels stopped turning...
P1030708.jpg


We managed to get it out by dragging it around so it was pointed towards the road. Eric pushed while I manned the clutch and throttle and...voila'!
P1030710.jpg


We'd heard all about the famous Carrizo mud, about how it was sneaky and nasty and would lure you in by not looking all that sinister until you were being hopelessly dragged down into the quicksandy muck with a kung-fu grip. Well, I can tell you good people that what they say is all true. The hardest part for me was keeping my boots on! It was incredibly difficult to pull my foot out of the quagmire and I almost lost my boots every time I tried to move! Speaking of boots, I cracked up every time I looked at them, so for your viewing pleasure...
P1030709.jpg


It didn't take us long to get unstuck, but it did eat into the day and we would have to make a bomb run around the north end of the plain to get to our campspot before dark...
CarrizoPlainJan2010016.jpg


We didn't make it...
P1030726.jpg


We only had about 30 miles to go at this point...
P1030728.jpg


We had planned on hitting up some hot springs near the coast the next day but we both agreed that we needed some more Plain action the next day. It was stunning...not what we expected at all. Kinda like when I wanted to ride forest trails on my first trip to Utah instead of slickrock because I rode asphalt every day on my way to work :lol: Funny how ignorant we can be sometimes. Before we got there I actually said "Well, one side of the valley probably looks exactly like the other so we just need to go down the main road to see it." What an idiot...

More to come from our 2nd day on the Carrizo Plain:thumbsup:




WoodsChick
 
Muddy Waters;143151 said:
Love it, thank god some of us get to ride and are nice enough to let the rest of us tag along in the camera bag :applause:

:thumbsup:


Thanks, Muddy!


The next day was even nicer than the first. We were pretty excited to get out there so we were up long before the sun.This was the view from our campspot. The sun was on the floor of the plain but hadn't made its way to us yet when we fired up the bikes...
CarrizoPlainJan2010017.jpg


We decided to go back out to the scene of our mud-stuckness, only this time from the other side of the road...
P1030744.jpg


We didn't see anyone still out there, and we saw huge chunks of mud in the middle of the main road so all must have ended well for our stuck bretheren.

The San Andreas Fault runs right beneath the Temblor Range, and it certainly looks like an active area...
P1030748.jpg


P1030756.jpg


These roads sing the siren's song to me...
P1030752.jpg


P1030761.jpg


The huge amount of rain that turned the plain into a carpet of green also turned some roads into fun washes...or is it the other way around?
P1030763.jpg


I dunno...maybe it's just me, but I can't get over how beautiful this area is...
P1030764.jpg


CarrizoPlainJan2010020.jpg


CarrizoPlainJan2010023.jpg


We headed to lunch in Maricopa and saw this on the way...
P1030765.jpg


P1030769.jpg


Ooh...more fog, and we're headed down into it...dang it...
P1030773.jpg


We cruised through the fog and down into Maricopa for lunch. We ate at a really funky little place called Tina's. Hard to believe the health department didn't shut it down 30 years ago when it opened, but I'm really glad they didn't. It was one of the best burgers we've ever had, and the fries were out-frikking-rageous! Really, some of the best we've ever had. Home cooking at its best...from Tina herself. The old oil guys at the counter were fun to talk to, as well. Wish I'd gotten a photo of it but I was cold and groovin' on the eats.

We headed south on the aptly-named Petroleum Highway...nothing but oil wells as far as the eye could see in every direction. It was eerie yet cool at the same time. It smelled funny, though...
P1030777.jpg


It was cold and miserable as we headed back to the Plain from the east. As soon as we started climbing it got sunny and spring-like again.
Descending Hurricane Road down into the Plain...
P1030782.jpg


This was a fun road!
CarrizoPlainJan2010025.jpg


We had to stop and peel off layers...
P1030784.jpg


We knew our ride was coming to a close, as we had to get home. We both plan on coming back as soon as we can, though. Maybe for my birthday in March when the wildflowers are exploding all over.

Is it spring yet??
P1030781.jpg





WoodsChick
 
Whodathunkit? If you didn't do one of your signature travelogues about this area, I would have never suspected that there were such great riding opportunities smack dab in the middle of what I have always considered the "armpit" of California.:lol::thumbsup:
 
wallybean;143164 said:
Very cool. Thanks for taking the time to give us another adventure to ride along.

Thanks! I enjoy putting the ride reports together almost as much as I enjoy the ride. It's kind of a way to burn it into my swiss-cheese memory and it provides me with a travel diary of sorts. It's fun to be able to go back and look at this stuff :)

letitsnow;143167 said:
^^^ Yes, what he said.

:lol: Thanks!

Dirtdame;143202 said:
Whodathunkit? If you didn't do one of your signature travelogues about this area, I would have never suspected that there were such great riding opportunities smack dab in the middle of what I have always considered the "armpit" of California.:lol::thumbsup:

I know, huh? I've been traveling that God-forsaken stretch of HWY 5 all my life and I never suspected such bikey goodness could lie right over the ridge! I didn't realize San Luis Obispo was so close to Bakersfield. It was always just dust and oil rigs and smelly cows and stuff. Never in my wildest dreams...


Planepower;143205 said:
Wow! Thank you for sharing, not just the pictures but the story too. Very beautiful there!

The pleasure was all mine, Planepower. Thanks for reading!




WoodsChick
 
Yep chalk up another top report to Woodsie. Thanks for the effort yet again. I get to see a lot of great American riding country through your lens and words. Please keep it up-even if you sometimes do them on smokers.
 
Yep chalk up another top report to Woodsie. Thanks for the effort yet again. I get to see a lot of great American riding country through your lens and words. Please keep it up-even if you sometimes do them on smokers.

smile.gif
Thanks for the kind words, gthe! The smokers are my first love, but I've really taken to exploring the wonderful West on my dualsport.

WoodsChick
 
Back
Top