Route 66 & Vegas baby

SMcGirr

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Hi All, I have had such entertainment reading other peoples ride stories I thought you might like reading about "our" wee trip through Arizona, Nevada through Route 66, Vegas and back across the Hoover Dam to Phoenix.

I will have to do this story a bit at a time so bear with me and need to work out how to get my pictures up.

The trip, all in about 800 miles was to start in Phoenix at Buddy Stubbs Harley where I, normally an RT rider was picking up a HD Electra Glide Ultra. http://www.buddystubbshd.com/ provided the EGU (Electra Glide Ultra), lovely bike, spotless, well prepared and ready to go at 8am on the 9th October. It should have been the 8th but British Airways, a mess of an outfit if I ever saw one got us there a day late. I'll rant at the very end about them !

All in, the team was Brian, the birthday fella, Morag the sister, all the way in from Ireland and a wee bit north of 35 and never pillioned before so a big up to her on his RT, me and my son Conor on pillion on the EGU, Aidan, all of 17, with a full US bike licence on a minter R1150 R. Missing in action was Ciaran who couldn't get away from Uni, mores the pity. we'll come back to the 17 yr old on a big bike later but let me tell you the lad did good and seriously challenges the notion that teenagers shouldn't be allowed on big bikes.

Anyway, having never ridden a tractor on 2 wheels I was a bit nervous of the size, handling and weight so rode back from Phoenix to the brothers place in Anthem, north of Phoenix with no pillion to pick everyone else up and head on. First impressions, the bike was feckin heavy, the controls all agricultural and despite this being a Project Rushmore 2015 model, it was quite retro despite the LED lights, ShatNav, Stereo CB connections, clock, washing machine and tumble drier. Once moving though it wasn't so bad although the brakes (what brakes ? ) and the levers were all oversize and didn't really do much. The seat was comfy enough but quickly it became apparent that you need some tin foil down your right trouser leg to ensure its cooked evenly without the skin being too crispy.

Having had a whole 1/2 hour experience of a Massey Ferguson with two missing wheels I felt completely ready to load it up with 5 days worth of stuff for 2 and a grown up son. Morag did a inelegant climbing on manoeuvre onto the RT, we all loaded up and set off in 35 degrees of Arizona sunshine towards our destination of Sedona in the north of Arizona that night.

With Bran and Morag in the front, Aidan in the middle, I brought up the rear on the EGU. Second impressions : brakes ? what brakes ? no telelever so whilst not braking much at all, the front dives like a Man City player and the relatively high position of the rear not-brake-lever makes it feckin hard to smoothly come to a stop with all of 450kgs to balance. Whilst handling was better than expected, having a fairly poor preconception of HDs, it was worse than required. Acceleration ? in the same place as the brakes i.e. Missing in Action. the stereo ? A nice idea but at 70 ish I could hear feck all. To keep you company on a long run, theres lots of vibration and feet shuffling to manage the heel toe gear lever and avoid the uneven cooked right leg. Surprisingly though the wee half moon screen dose take the wind blast away which was, on this trip a bad thing as it was so hot. Panniers and top box though were great and my pillion was comfy and content.
 
I had my first taste of HD in the same area, select neutral before you stop, don't push the handling and do not, what ever you do, brake hard in to a corner...

Look forward to your report bud :thumb2
 
More please mister :beerjug:

:D
 
so here she is

the EGU ready to pick up
 

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the EGU and Buddy Stubbs

so if you ever are in Arizona call in and see these guys. It was Wayne Baxter who sorted us out, no issue about picking the bike up late and because unseasonably it was forecast to rain, he lent us spare waterproofs "just in case". AS it turned out we didn't need them as whatever the end of a hurricane thingy had blown in from the Pacific had gone through the night before.
 
day1

Phoenix to Jerome
 

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the ride to Wickenburg was uneventful, 55 -60 all the way and time to get acquainted with the switches and controls. To give HD their due an indicator switch on each handlebar with a push for on and another for off works well even if the brakes don't, did I mention the brakes ? Pillion Conor though wasn't overly happy about there being no grab handles but you probably don't need them much when sat in an armchair and there are no brakes
 

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we stopped in Jerome after a long battle with the Starship EGU up a very twisty mountain road where I wished that I was on my RT. Running wide was the order of the day and positive inputs plus counter steering ++ to get the bike to lay down enough in the corners. Jerome is about a mile up and we had intended to be there a day earlier and stay overnight but British Airways fecked it and I am still waiting for a response to my complaint 3 weeks later, more on that as we go, not that I am a whinging bastard or anything ???

Lots of nice restaurants here so we had a large US sized burger and bits and onwards to Sedona with the brown rocks
 
a long battle with the Starship EGU up a very twisty mountain road where I wished that I was on my RT(RT, GS, RS, just about anything else really). Running wide was the order of the day and positive inputs plus counter steering ++ to get the bike to lay down enough in the corners
I feel your pain, I think the idea is to slow down, quite a bit :D

Mind you, quite a few HD rode past us, sans helmets, gloves, boots... :blast
 
so after our big feed we saddled up and rode about another hour onwards into Sedona staying at the Aroyo Pinion Hotel on the way on the outskirts of town http://arroyopinionhotel-ascend.h-rez.com/index.htm?lbl=ggl-en&gclid=CLDyoIvh5sECFWnMtAodoQoAiQ nice enough, 3 star but 5 star prices as in October the temperature is getting pleasantly cooler and all the Yank crumblies are getting out and about. This was our first proper night since we got to the US of A so we went out on the town to find that almost everything is closed up at about 9. That was shite but we found a wee bar that was supposed to be Irish but it was not even a good impersonation. The story, from the locals, is that Sedona is one of those places where a few very rich peeps move in and build big mansions, understandable because the place is gorgeous. But having a big mansion means that you do all your entertaining at home and they infiltrate the local town councils and change the ordinances so that the towns are nice and quiet and they don't get disturbed. Hence more or less feck all at night time.

We did however find a great wee restaurant, or rather the birthday boy did and pre booked. I cant remember the name but the food was great so if you are ever there, find out and let me know. Actually I can, it was called Relics and was just great. At this point though we sussed that Morag had an addiction, to WiFi as she fell behind in the car park of the hotel until she had time to update her facebook account. This became a theme of the trip.

A picture of Morag, plese give her a big "up" as I said, 35 years plus, never been on a bike, never mind a bike trip and gave it a go without too much complaining.
 

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a bit about Morag ! She is the big sister and first daughter (we think) of Morag One.
We are a bit pissed with her though as she inherited all the family fleecey jumpers from Morag One and wears them blazonly to this day to wind us up.
 
the next morning

we were up bright and early and the birfday boy spun a yarn about how Harleys are sometimes hard to start in the morning. So attempting to start the EGU took a bit of doing. Have you ever heard a Harley on one cylinder ? Potat... Potat... but no ...oe. That's what happens when someone disconnects the coil pack on the back cylinder.

Onwards up the mountain and through the absolutely beautiful Sedona, go there is you are either risch and want to stay, old and want to be in bed at 9 or passing through on a motorbike but one with brakes is best.
 

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Oak Creek has an Indian Reservation but there are no Indians there only native Americans as they aren't called that other thing anymore. Nobody changed the road signs though. We bought shittery for home and went to the scariest bog I have ever been in. See pics below. The bog was a bog thing but needing a not number one, the pot was required. The product however didn't fall into a pan but fell about 60 ft down a hole into a gulley. when I looked to see why no splash it was easy to see how you could lose a child or a small midget straight down into a pile of 200 year old crap.

The piccie shows the curly wurley road. Great for an RT, not so good if you have no br..... you get the idea ?
 

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the indian reservation is the bit off to the side when you look at the picture after the last left hand corner coming up from the bottom
 
day 2 took in Sedona, 66 miles of Route 66, Kingman and Vegas baby as outlined below
 

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the bit from west of Flagstaff to Seligman was just big road, but have a look on Google maps, its big road in big country with huge views either side and makes you feel really small in the big scheme. I liked this bit, a couple of hours of 60 -70 just winding through the high valleys with the big views. You couldn't mistake it for England, that's for sure.

From Seligman we took a wee detour north west to Route 66. This was great, just like in Cars with Radiator Springs, really its called Peach Springs. Loads of bikes, a geriatric trip out in the Los Angeles, Mazda Miata Route 66 drivers club, i.e. 6 or 7 minter MX5s with double geriatric occupants with the whole sticker thing all over the cars and sweatshirts with logos to that effect. I shit you not ! The funniest was them parking against the kerb/ curb and bottoming out the doors on the pavement as the cars leaned over in the kerb side drain. Maybe first and last trip ?
 

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more tomorrow, don't forget to big up Morag Two, daughter of Morag One
 
so to the 17 yr old

the one thing I really like about motor biking is that you get time to think and on the big open roads of the US with not too much traffic and on a slow bike, comparatively, you get the chance. our mini convoy had the RT up front with the Bro and Morag, an R1150 R in the middle with the neph and me and my son bringing up the back on the EGU.

being at the back has its disadvantages as you have to respond to the pace and unless you hang back quite a bit both accelerating and braking are bit more jerky than further up front. I got the chance to review the lines, the style and the ability of the neph in front. I tell you, this makes you wonder at the sense of all the hoops we have jump through here for young lads to prove their competence. This lad rode every bit as well as the old gits, his lines were good, his set up for corners and stops as good as the rest of us and he wasn't knackered at the end of the days like I was. He has the bike on the road completely legally since he was 16 !!!!. Before the journey I was worried about a youngster and his ability to stay safe but after this, I'd have to say that I had it wrong and we have it wrong here. Maybe this lad was a bit more sensible than most, maybe being in the company of old gits was an influence but all that shite about having to build competence is just that, shite.

Here he is with his non restricted, non nanny state r1150 r
 

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