Originally posted by: Turin39789
How long did it take you / how did you go about it?
I've never ridden more than 30 miles myself, but I've been thinking about trying out long stretches. I have a friend who rode from Louisville Ky to Mexico, packing everything with him. He tent camped and stopped somewhere in texas with a friend for a few days.
Originally posted by: Luthien
arrfep wow! Most people only dream of doing that or walking it.
How did you do it? Did you carry everying in a backpack on your back? Camp out every night accept when you could catch a shower or meet someone that invited you home?
Very interesting.
I think the furthest I ever rode is maybe 30 miles.
The trip itself took me 66 days, from the first day of riding to the last. In that span were probably 7 days where I didn't ride at all, except for incidental miles around the town I was relaxing in. Total mileage according to my cyclometer (which I meticulously calibrated) was 3967 miles. Again, that includes some random mileage like wandering around Pueblo, CO on an off day trying to find a bar showing Le Tour or the Post Office that I'd had my drivers license mail-dropped to.
My longest day was 161 miles. Actually that wasn't technically all in one day, since we were up for more than 24 hours.
The desert is a b!tch. It was 122 degrees when we passed through Baker, CA.
I carried all my stuff in front and rear panniers, and lashed to my front and rear racks. All told, my bike probably weighed around 110 lbs. when I started the trip. I know it was enough that I could barely lift it off the ground. In it I carried literally everything I needed to survive. I was 100% self-sufficient (mostly because I can be paranoid sometimes) so I could go a few days without finding civilization if I needed to (I never did).
"Accomodations" were mostly parks. That was actually a new thing to me. I was riding a route called the Transamerica, planned by a company called
Adventure Cycling. The company maps the route for you, and gives suggestions on where to find a place to stay. Well plenty of these places, especially in Kansas and Missouri, were public parks. As in "slides and swingset in the middle of a neighborhood" parks. It was weird at first but you get used to it. By the second month of the trip, I'd joined up with a guy my same age doing the same route, and we pretty much just guerilla camped wherever we found a plot of land.
Of course once you get out to Colorado and west, pretty much everything is a National Park or National Forest Service, so there is always someplace "legal" to pitch a tent. I spent probably 8 nights in hotels, and a couple nights in houses of people I'd met in town earlier in the day. The trip helped reaffirm my faith in people. I met so many amazing people that opened their homes to me without hesitation.
As for showering...I did it when I could. By my 3rd week in or so, I could have a complete shower with 2 22oz water bottles.
I had an online journal for a while at
Crazyguyonabike but I got distracted the second half of my trip and stopped writing it. I never updated it, and the webmaster ended up taking it down. LOL, email him and ask if he has a copy of the "Struggle Bus" journal....maybe he'll let you (or me) read it. That really is an excellent website though, and it helped me tremendously, both before the trip and during.
Anyway. That's pretty much it. Well, now that's not the tip of it but I'm tired of typing. My advice to anyone who is planning a tour is
Buy and break in a Brooks Saddle, and use some chamois cream! Your ass will thank you for both of those things....if anyone has any questions, feel free to ask!
Oooh yeah. Here's a few
Pics