CHAPTER 16
NO ROOM AT THE INN
DAY 13
For some reason we made a slow start to the day. It certainly wasn’t the peace and tranquillity of the campsite that induced us to lie in. Just as dawn was breaking, a large motorhome had arrived and promptly performed the popular campsite slapstick routine of ‘how do we park this thing?’ Very loudly. As a result of this funny-were-it-not-so-painful performance, no prolonged sleeping had been possible.
Yet we were lucky to leave before 7.30 a.m. Maybe it was untangling the cord with which I had insisted we suspend all our odoriferous belongings to reduce their appeal to passing bears. With everyone else secure in the metal carapaces of their vehicular homes from home, the campsite (obviously the designation was a relic of the days when people actually camped) contained no bear bins.
Still, we had survived unmolested and, late as we were, we were soon rewarded with fine views of the western flanks of the famous Teton mountains. This, apparently, was their less flattering side, but it still showed up pretty well across the Idaho arable land through which we cycled.
‘My mom used to say that Tetons is actually the French word for breast,’ confided Stephen.
‘It’s true,’ I said, shamelessly implying a European linguistic superiority over my American host.
‘Yeah, she was a French teacher,’ Stephen added.
We both agreed that we had never seen quite such jagged breasts, but it was better than the original Anglophone alternative: Pilot Knobs.
After several miles of tarmac we turned onto the Ashton–Flagg Ranch road, also known as the Reclamation Road, though what it was reclaiming and from whom was unclear. Initially it was quiet but broad and straight and covered in dusty gravel. It felt as though progress should have been easy, but the gradient was deceptive. It was also hot. For the sun, though, we were still prepared to be thankful.
Another hour or so later and we departed our second state in two days. We left Idaho with considerably less fanfare than we had left Montana – partly because it had not required undue exertion to pass through, but mainly because of the volume of mosquitoes. They were so prolific that even stopping for a call of nature was hazardous. In fact, I suffered the indignity of being bitten in a very sensitive area while watering the last flowers in Idaho. Otherwise we would quite happily have celebrated our departure over-enthusiastically.
Our entry into Wyoming saw the road turn into a trail and become much tougher going. It was both rougher and steeper, and Per in particular struggled. It was clear that the pain in his knee meant he could no longer stand up to pedal when the gradient required. In fact, though he tried to hide it, he could scarcely tolerate sitting down and was forced to walk not by gradient or terrain but by the pain.
I was concerned I was becoming something of a curse. First Steve McGuire, then Jacob, then Ray – all had been constrained to stop shortly after I had caught them. I explained my concerns to Per.
‘I might have to take steps to stop you instead,’ he said grimly.
I assumed he was joking.
I asked what he did when he wasn’t voluntarily causing himself considerable discomfort in such unlikely surroundings. He said he had come to the UK from Sweden to study at university in London ten years ago and hadn’t returned. He was now 29 and worked for F&C Management doing something with derivatives and spreadsheets. I say doing something. Per wasn’t secretive about it. He did explain exactly what it was, but having almost as complete an aversion to financial markets as to the terrifying ubiquity of Excel, it fell on deaf ears. Instead, I resorted to caricature.
‘Ah, you’re to blame for the credit crunch,’ I said, using provocation to distract Per from his pain and the possibility that he might really take it upon himself to exorcise the curse that I apparently inflicted on my riding companions.
‘No, I’m the one who can make the money to get us out of it.’
Given my state of ignorance, I felt in no position to argue.
We plodded on. The going might have been challenging but the scenery was beautiful. We were once more in thick tree cover, interspersed this time with water meadows and gently flowing streams. This beauty should not have come as a great surprise. After all, we were sandwiched between two of North America’s most famous and popular national parks – Grand Teton to the south, and Yellowstone, the granddaddy of them all, to the north.
Even if its main attractions were to remain elusive, passing this close to Yellowstone was a highlight of the trip. It needed little introduction: it was the world’s first national park; it was estimated to contain half of the world’s active hydrothermal features, including 300 geysers; it had recently been worthy of its own BBC documentary, complete with an awed voiceover in hushed, reverential tones. Fittingly, an impromptu, David Attenborough-style commentary came into my head.
‘Here, now, is a strange species, not believed to be native to Yellowstone but one of the few remaining large, nomadic creatures to still roam across the whole of the continent. The cyclist. Long thought to be related to humans, the antipathy evident in some of their interactions with us, particularly with motorists, has led scientists to conclude that they are in fact a completely separate species. But no one knows for sure where they have come from, nor even where they are going.’
In the short term our aspirations were no greater than to reach Flagg Ranch for lunch. We weren’t sure what to expect when we got there, Flagg Ranch having assumed a far greater importance on the Tour Divide route map than its size appeared to justify, but we felt confident of a hot meal and warm welcome. We received the hot meal at least, though at a price far beyond anything paid on the trip so far. The welcome was less convivial.
This seemed to have a lot to do with the fact Flagg Ranch was nothing more than a glorified service station designed to exploit the myriad tourists passing through. With miles of nothing in all directions, and a prime location on US Highway 89, the main route between the two big national park honeypots, the simple economics of supply and demand determined that prices would be elevated. Why it was necessary to be quite so disdainful of impecunious cyclists was less obvious, unless we were perceived as a deterrent to more lucrative custom. Or maybe it was the constant, mosquito-induced itching in my nether regions which Lycra did a very poor job of disguising.
After eating our fill, the descent from the sublime beauty and tranquillity of the morning to the ridiculous omnipresence and incompetence of motorhome-driving holiday-makers was soon completed. It was then exacerbated by roadworks. As a result, we had to deal not only with the inevitable post-prandial torpor but also blazing sunshine and a mile-and-a-half-long queue of cars and trucks.
At the front of the queue was a man holding a ‘stop/go’ sign. He had just turned it to ‘stop’. With frustration at progress already slowed by squeezing past static traffic and discomfort in the heat growing in equal measure, I tried to sneak past and keep riding along the section of the road that was cordoned off; of course, no work was actually being undertaken. It was to no avail.
‘Hey, you can’t ride through yet.’
Worse was to follow.
‘You’ve got to put your bikes in the pilot car. We’re not insured to let cyclists ride through the roadwork zone.’
Ignorant of the concept of a pilot car, I was uncertain what to expect. It turned out to be a woman in a small, beaten-up pick-up whose job was to drive ahead of each wave of cars, a modern equivalent of the man with the red flag in the early days of motoring. She clearly had little experience of accommodating cyclists, certainly not those as laden as we were.
‘I guess we’ll have to put your bikes in the back, but I can’t do more than two at a time,’ she suggested.
Per and I being the two closest, we inelegantly hauled our bikes onto the back of the truck and tried in vain to make them secure. The irony of this being the greatest threat to their and our well-being was not lost on us; nor was it lost on our driver.
‘I don’t have insurance that covers damage to bikes on my truck,’ she said, rather pointedly.
Had we realised we were uninsured either way it would have been preferable to take our chances on the road, but it was now too late. I couldn’t help but contrast our current fate with the distinctly laissez-faire approach of Montana, where cycling down motorways and riding motorbikes without helmets was not only allowed but de rigueur. This, on the other hand, seemed symptomatic of the pettifogging bureaucracy that suggests the US is doomed to be a failed experiment in individual freedom: a rampant fear of central government, but a similar phobia of placing sufficient trust in personal responsibility to avoid regulatory micro-management. Except in Montana, perhaps.
After three miles of sporadic road-mending activity we were allowed to disembark. The flood of cars behind us had dissipated, and the next few miles were blissfully car-free, on our side of the road at least. Then the next wave came, and so it continued for the next 30 miles, the longest paved section of the ride so far.
Relief was provided by expanding views to our right of the eastern, more photographed flank of the Tetons. Seen reflected in the calm waters of Jackson Lake under a cloudless sky, they were spectacular indeed. They were also the most ‘mountain-like’ of all the mountains encountered in the past thousand or so miles, at least to the eyes of a European brought up on Alpine vistas. They had sharp edges befitting their imposing stature – up to nearly 14,000 feet at Grand Teton – as well as permanent snow and glaciers. They also had the distinction of rising a clear 7,000 feet above the valley below them, with nothing in between.
This notable difference from all that had preceded them, even the serried ranks of snow-clad peaks in Canada, was due to their considerable youth, having only been thrust upwards in the past ten million years or so. Much of the rest of the Rockies is 70 million years old, and the topography of even the highest peaks has been modified and softened by prolonged exposure to weathering and erosion. Indeed, thus far, the only common thread that had run through the journey was the diversity of the mountains encountered. The Rockies, it appeared, were far from the homogenous chain envisaged in childhood hours spent poring over maps and dreaming of adventure.
The sun continued to beat down. Even on the valley floor we were more than 7,000 feet above sea level, but there was no respite from the heat and the still, claustrophobic air. The sun’s rays seemed to be intensified by the bleached concrete of the road. Per and I stopped to wait for Trevor and Stephen. Once reunited, we continued our eastward progress.
Eventually we came to a junction with a quieter road, and were greatly relieved to be directed down it. We were even happier to find, soon afterwards, an unheralded café on our left. The decision to stop for cooling refreshments was unspoken but unanimous. It was also inspired.
The Buffalo Valley Café was as charming and welcoming as Flagg Ranch had been cold and soulless. We set up camp on the veranda, then went inside to peruse the menu. We passed under a handmade sign:
‘Cowboys! Scrape __it from boots before entering.’
It was clear what __it was.
‘You’ve got to have a body fat test before you can order anything here,’ said a typically well-built cowboy propping up the bar on his day off.
We explained our route and told him that we could eat with the best of them. He seemed reassured by our credentials. A minute later, however, he came out to the veranda to inspect us further. He was, it transpired, retired rather than resting, having been thrown from a horse once too often and broken his neck. He nevertheless sported the most immaculate pair of lilac cowboy boots. This was cowboy bling.
He also wore a T-shirt emblazoned with a slogan that was hard to decipher due to the lumberjack shirt that partially obscured it.
‘This Vietnam Vet is heavily . . . ated.’
Was ‘decorated’ the missing word? An unfolding of the arms revealed the truth.
‘This Vietnam Vet is heavily medicated for your protection.’
That was all right then.
The somewhat eccentric cross-examination continued while we waited for our order to arrive. We had been persuaded to ask for ‘ice-cream shakes’, a somewhat unconventional nourishment for elite endurance athletes (was it possible they hadn’t recognised us for what we clearly were?). No sooner had we ordered four, in coffee-caramel flavour, however, than it became apparent the café had run out of ice cream. Not that this was a deterrent. A golf-cart trip to the neighbours later and they were on their way. When they finally arrived, in foot-high glasses, they were well worth the wait. All they had to do now was fuel us up the last climb of the day.
Togwotee Pass represented another crossing of the Continental Divide as well as a new high-point. Eighteen miles of climbing would take us from 7,000 feet to more than 9,500 feet. Fortunately, a large chunk of the climb was on metalled roads. But first, we had to climb steeply through rough country at the bottom of the pass. The intensity of the sun had begun to wane – it was now after 5 p.m. – but was more than compensated for by the effort required. Occasional trail-engulfing puddles served as a reminder of the rain of previous days, but in the main the route was dry.
Gradually, after more than an hour, the gradient eased and the main road was rejoined. The last nine miles were easy by comparison and the road largely traffic-free. At the top we reconvened and admired the view. At 9,658 feet we were above the treeline, among meadows. Close to hand were buttresses of ancient sedimentary rocks rising well above 10,000 feet. Further afield, the Tetons were still visible behind us, silhouetted against the lowering sun.
We congratulated ourselves on the progress made, and looked forward to the imminence of our overnight accommodation.
‘The lodge is less than 5 miles away and it’s all downhill. We should be there in 20 minutes, by half past eight hopefully,’ I said.
My description was accurate, but my ETA was out by an hour. I had overlooked the most pertinent section of the route description:
‘It is impassable when wet.’
The western side of the mountain had had sufficient time to dry; the eastern slope clearly had not. No sooner had we left the main road and returned to the darkening woods than it became impossible to cycle. We were up to our axles in mud. Worse, the mud was compounded by remnant snow patches several feet deep and several hundred yards long.
I reacted with unconcealed rage, charging into each obstacle in a fury of cursing and shouting. I stumbled and bludgeoned my way forward. It was not an edifying spectacle, but it was the only alternative to sitting down at the side of the track and crying.
Further behind, and once again handicapped by his sore knee, Per had apparently adopted the same philosophy, only with more colourful language.
‘Ride. Stop. Fall over. Swear loudly in Swedish. Repeat,’ was his subsequent description.
I asked what was the appropriate Swedish swear word for the occasion.
‘Fan!’
The feeling with which Per said it rendered a request for translation irrelevant.
Not surprisingly, it was in a slightly harassed state that we arrived at our intended accommodation for the night. Stephen and I were there first, and we decided to ignore the sign on the gate that read ‘Reservations Only’. After all, there was nothing on the map to suggest Brooks Lake Lodge was any different from all the other suggested overnight stops we had already encountered.
This changed when we asked a girl drinking beer on a porch outside one of the log cabins if we could stay for the night.
‘Well, the answer’s no if you haven’t reserved in advance,’ she said apologetically.
Covered in mud and grime and barely able to talk coherently, we didn’t need to explain that we hadn’t booked.
‘I guess I could go and ask the boss, but I’m pretty sure he’ll say no.’
It was a chance we were prepared to take. The sun had long since set, and the clear sky meant temperatures had plummeted. With the warming effect of the adrenalin of our latest escapade now having worn off, the prospect of a night under canvas with inadequate insulation was less than appealing.
‘Hi, I’m Adam, how can I help?’ said the boss, not looking particularly intent on being helpful.
I began to plead for somewhere to stay for the night.
‘Even a barn we could pitch our tents in would be great . . .’ I trailed off.
Adam appeared pensive.
‘I think we’ve got a couple of rooms that housekeeping hasn’t yet cleaned up, let me go and see.’
He disappeared. We fretted. He returned.
‘Yep, you can have the rooms if you don’t mind sharing them between you.’
Mind? We were delighted. In spite of our filthy state, we were shown in through a magnificent, timbered living room with vast open fireplace to two of the plushest bedrooms I’d had the pleasure to see.
‘Er, perhaps I should just ask how much it will cost,’ I whispered to Stephen.
He nodded.
‘Oh, you’re not really supposed to stay but you seem like nice guys, so just leave twenty bucks for housekeeping,’ said Adam.
Our joy knew no bounds. Per and Trevor arrived and could scarcely disguise their astonishment.
‘I thought he was gonna be a real hard ass when he first came out, but Paul’s English accent did the trick,’ said Stephen.
In fact, it seemed Adam had little need of external motivation to be hospitable. He just needed the lodge to be empty of paying guests – those who paid more than $300 per night for exclusive access to its services, that is. Looking at the state of us, it was not an unreasonable viewpoint.
‘Would you guys like something to eat? The chef is off duty, but I’ve got plenty of stuff in the fridge.’
We didn’t need asking twice. Cold meat, salads, bread and glasses of milk appeared and then rapidly disappeared. The pièce de résistance was birthday cake.
‘Go on, eat as much as you can. It’ll only get thrown away otherwise. The person whose birthday it was has gone.’
Ours, it appeared, had come early.